Gynosexual is a term that quietly solves a problem older orientation labels struggle with: how do you describe what you're attracted to without first having to define your own gender? Here's what it means and why it exists.
What is gynosexual?
Gynosexual (also spelled gynesexual) means being romantically and/or sexually attracted to women, femininity, or female-presenting people — regardless of your own gender identity.
The prefix gyno- comes from the Greek for "woman." So at its core, gynosexual describes attraction to femininity. The crucial part is the second half: it says nothing about the gender of the person experiencing the attraction. A man, a woman, a non-binary person, or a genderqueer person can all be gynosexual, because the term defines the target of attraction, not the orientation relative to one's own gender.
Why the term exists: a gap older labels leave
Traditional orientation words are defined relative to your own gender. "Heterosexual" means attracted to a different gender than your own; "homosexual" means attracted to the same gender. Both require you to first fix your own gender as a reference point.
That works fine within a strict gender binary. It gets awkward the moment your own gender doesn't fit neatly into "man" or "woman." If you're non-binary, what does "same" or "different" gender even mean?
Gynosexual (and its counterpart, androsexual — attraction to men or masculinity) sidesteps the problem entirely. Instead of "I'm attracted to the same/opposite gender as me," it lets you say "I'm attracted to femininity," full stop — no need to define yourself first. That's why these terms are especially valued by non-binary, genderqueer, and gender-nonconforming people, though anyone can use them.
Gynosexual vs related terms
| Term | Attracted to | Defined relative to your own gender? |
|---|---|---|
| Gynosexual | Women / femininity | No |
| Androsexual | Men / masculinity | No |
| Heterosexual | A gender different from your own | Yes |
| Homosexual | The same gender as your own | Yes |
The key insight: gynosexual is gender-of-self-neutral. Two people who'd describe themselves with completely different traditional labels — say, a straight man and a lesbian woman — are both gynosexual, because both are attracted to women. The term groups people by what attracts them, not by how their own gender relates to it.
Femininity, not just biology
It's worth noting that "femininity" in gynosexual can mean different things to different people. For some, it points to women specifically. For others, it's about feminine presentation, energy, or gender expression more broadly — which can include feminine-presenting non-binary people. As with most identity language, the term gives you a starting point; the precise meaning is whatever honestly describes your attraction.
Where gynosexual fits among other labels
Gynosexual describes who/what you're attracted to. That makes it a sexual orientation, distinct from labels that describe other dimensions of attraction — like sapiosexual (attracted to intelligence) or demisexual (attraction that only develops after an emotional bond). These stack: you can be gynosexual and sapiosexual, for instance. Each answers a different question about how your attraction works.
Like every identity term, gynosexual is a tool for self-description and communication, not a box you have to qualify for. If it captures your experience, it's yours.
Dating as a gynosexual person
The practical appeal of terms like gynosexual is precision: you can say exactly what you're drawn to without a paragraph of caveats about your own identity. The frustration is that most mainstream dating apps weren't built for that precision — they assume a binary self-gender and a binary preference.
This is one reason open-minded dating, and apps that let you express identity and intent directly, resonate across the LGBTQ+ spectrum. Being able to describe who you are and what attracts you — rather than picking the "closest" wrong option — makes dating feel honest instead of approximate.
If you'd rather date as yourself, download Flava. Show what actually attracts you and find people on the same page. More on the features page.
Keep reading
- What is omnisexual? — attraction to all genders, with gender still a factor
- What is sapiosexuality? — attraction to intelligence
- Open-minded dating apps in 2026 — identity-friendly, honest dating
- What is comphet? — the pressure to assume a "default" orientation
- What your turn-ons say about your dating style — how preferences reveal what you want
Frequently Asked Questions
What does gynosexual mean? Gynosexual means being romantically and/or sexually attracted to women, femininity, or female-presenting people — regardless of your own gender. The term focuses on the object of attraction (femininity) rather than the gender of the person feeling it.
What is the difference between gynosexual and heterosexual? Heterosexual is defined relative to your own gender (attraction to a different gender than yours). Gynosexual is not — it simply means attraction to femininity, no matter your own gender. A straight man and a lesbian woman can both be gynosexual.
Who uses the term gynosexual? Anyone attracted to women or femininity can use it, but it's especially valued by non-binary, genderqueer, and gender-nonconforming people, because it lets them describe their attraction without first having to define their own gender as "same" or "different."
What is the opposite of gynosexual? Androsexual — attraction to men or masculinity, regardless of your own gender. Gynosexual and androsexual are counterparts: one describes attraction to femininity, the other to masculinity, and neither requires you to specify your own gender.
Is gynosexual a sexual orientation? Yes. Gynosexual is a recognized sexual orientation describing attraction to women or femininity. It's valid on its own and can also stack with other attraction labels, like sapiosexual or demisexual, which describe different dimensions of attraction.



